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Nov 20, 2010

Scientists Plugging Holes in Concrete With Specially Engineered Super Bacteria

Repairing damaged concrete often requires pouring more fresh stuff, or digging it all up and starting over again. But thanks to germ experts at the University of Newcastle, custom bacteria—"BackFilla"—might be the future of fixing.

The bacteria, once released into a damaged area, procreate and spread into the cracks—and then die. But don't be sad—in their wake, they leave behind calcium carbonate corpses as strong as the original concrete. And don't worry—the researchers were canny enough to design the bacteria to know when their work is done, so they don't run amuck and cover the world in concrete:


The bacteria also contains a self-destruct gene that keeps it from wildly proliferating away from its concrete target, because a runaway patch of bacterial concrete that continued to grow despite all efforts to stop it would be somewhat annoying

Yes, annoying is right—or like something out of a very dull horror movie.



33 comments:

  1. lol, imagine a bread cologne of those things.... LOL

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  2. That's really cool, especially if it substantially cuts down on road repair costs and blocking off sections for days/weeks.

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  3. wow, this sounds like a great invention, no more huge bumps in the road

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  4. That is really interesting! Who knew that bacteria could be so useful outside our bodies?

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  5. This sounds nice. No more huge-ass potholes after winter.

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  6. certainly cut down costs on taxpayer money. finally scientists report something useful.

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  7. awesome stuff. interesting to see what comes from this.

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  8. I can see this causing an episode of the twilight zone

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  9. BackFilla?
    Seriously, that's the best thing they could come up with for that little fella.
    I want to slap whoever came up with that name.

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  10. wow man thats amazing

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  11. This has the potential to solve a lot of problems, especially if its cost effective.

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  12. Ouch I hurt my leg..... Plug it with bacteria!

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  13. That is pretty damn cool. I wonder how much it costs to accomplish though?

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  14. This looks amazing! Very great info

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  15. good news
    hope that thing dosnt make any sound
    that would be a savior

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  16. This could actually save a lot of tax payers money. Very cool.

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  17. Ive also heard about using fast growth of bacteria to be used for getting energy. Pretty good use of the microorganisms.

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  18. Hey it's willy wonka and his everlasting gobstopper come to life.

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  19. this is incredible..hopefully cheap as well

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  20. I dunno if I exactly want concrete corpse forming bacteria in the hands of construction workers ;_;

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  21. if this can repair cracks and other problems on the freeways for less than it already does to replace, refill, and re-asphalt, more power to them

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  22. Bacteria being used to clean oil spills, fix concrete, is there anything they can't do?

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  23. This is brilliant. Instant repairs will never be the same.

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